A Survey of Large Language Models: Evolution, Architectures, Adaptation, Benchmarking, Applications, Challenges, and Societal Implications
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This survey offers an in-depth review of Large Language Models (LLMs), highlighting the significant paradigm shift they represent in artificial intelligence. Our purpose is to consolidate state-of-the-art advances in LLM design, training, adaptation, evaluation, and application for both researchers and practitioners. To accomplish this, we trace the evolution of language models and describe core approaches, including Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning (PEFT). The methodology involves a thorough survey of real-world LLM applications across the scientific, engineering, healthcare, and creative sectors, coupled with a review of current benchmarks. Our findings indicate that high training and inference costs are shaping market structures, raising economic and labour concerns, while also underscoring a persistent need for human oversight in assessment. Key trends include the development of multimodal and agentic systems. We identify critical open problems, such as detectability, data contamination, generalisation, and benchmark diversity. Ultimately, we conclude that overcoming these complex technical, economic, and social challenges necessitates collaborative advancements in adaptation, evaluation, infrastructure, and governance.